Starting Sunday, prices for one–day tickets at the Disneyland Resort will now reflect demand. From the current price of $99 for a one–day/one–park ticket, prices will now be $95 for a “value day,” $105 for a “regular day,” and $119 for a “peak day.” Prices for multi–day tickets will also increase $10 for a two–day ticket and $20 for a three, four, and five–day ticket.

This new structure comes from Disney’s endeavor to reduce crowds during peak seasons.

This shift is being adopted from other industries like sports, entertainment, and travel which all use peak pricing.

Classifying certain days as “value,” “regular,” or “peak” is similar to assigning blockout dates on the low–tier annual passes during holidays, peak seasons, and weekends to regulate demand. As Disney has provided a calendar of annual pass blockout dates, there will also be a calendar separating dates into “value,” “regular,” or “peak.”

Here is the breakdown for the new one–day ticket pricing structure and multi–day ticket price increase effective February 28, 2016 at the Disneyland Resort:

One–Day/One–Park

Value: $95

Regular: $105

Peak: $119

One–Day Park Hopper

Value: $155

Regular: $160

Peak: $169

Multi–Day Tickets

2–Day/2–Day Park Hopper: $195/$235

3–Day/3–day Park Hopper: $255/$295

4–Day/4–Day Park Hopper: $280/$320

5–Day/5–Day Park Hopper: $295/$335

This move also gives more options to families planning their vacation, and may influence guests to plan their visit around non–peak seasons with “value day” pricing.

Prices for annual passes have not been affected by seasonal pricing. This new pricing structure is also being implemented at the Walt Disney World Resort.

Disney Parks have already begun implementing this demand pricing structure with Shanghai Disneyland set to open in just a few months. Time and guest feedback during this time will dictate the future of it spread to other Disney theme parks or the reversal of them entirely.

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Writer at DisneyExaminer. Seeking adventure in the great wide somewhere and lover of all things sweet. Reach me at michelle@disneyexaminer.com Find me on Instagram at @mintvalue and Twitter at @mint_value.

I know the parks are pretty crowded almost daily due to several factors besides just being a place people want to be, such as attraction refurbishments, closure of certain areas due to park expansion (SW land), etc., but has there been any word of a third gate?